News / National
Zimbabwe to abolish dual citizenship
11 May 2017 at 07:19hrs | Views
THE Government will not seek to re-align the Citizenship Act with the new Constitution, but will instead move for the amendment of the supreme law to abolish provisions allowing dual citizenship.
This was said by Registrar General Mr Tobaiwa Mudede while making a presentation on the Constitution and dual citizenship to the Zanu-PF parliamentary caucus at the party's headquarters yesterday.
The new Constitution allows for one to hold dual citizenship and Mr Mudede said this posed a number of security challenges to the country.
"As the Ministry of Home Affairs, we have decided that we are not going for realignment (of the Citizenship Act to the Constitution), but for amendment," he said.
Mr Mudede said some of the challenges that the dual citizenship posed included cases of tax evasion, evasion from justice, involvement in cases of human trafficking, international terrorism and problems in immigration control.
He said Sections 36, 37 and 43 of the Constitution had to be amended.
Mr Mudede queried why provisions requiring foreigners who acquired Zimbabwe's citizenship to take an oath of loyalty were removed in the new supreme law.
This was said by Registrar General Mr Tobaiwa Mudede while making a presentation on the Constitution and dual citizenship to the Zanu-PF parliamentary caucus at the party's headquarters yesterday.
The new Constitution allows for one to hold dual citizenship and Mr Mudede said this posed a number of security challenges to the country.
"As the Ministry of Home Affairs, we have decided that we are not going for realignment (of the Citizenship Act to the Constitution), but for amendment," he said.
Mr Mudede said some of the challenges that the dual citizenship posed included cases of tax evasion, evasion from justice, involvement in cases of human trafficking, international terrorism and problems in immigration control.
He said Sections 36, 37 and 43 of the Constitution had to be amended.
Mr Mudede queried why provisions requiring foreigners who acquired Zimbabwe's citizenship to take an oath of loyalty were removed in the new supreme law.
Source - chronicle